“You can search throughout the entire universe for someone who is more deserving of your love and affection than you are, and that person is not to be found anywhere.

You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.”

~ the Buddha

It’s Valentine’s Day, and if you are unmarried, you are in good company—with half of the American public.

Despite this fact, advertisers stage massive campaigns that equate love and affection with lavishing loved ones with material things. These campaigns increase fear and anxiety about being alone in addition to perpetuating heterosexism and limited cultural notions about love relationships.

Here are some helpful recommendations for building a more conscious relationship to the pressures at this particular time.

Be grateful for how far you have come. Reflect on your own path, and look for evidence of how you have stayed true to your values by remaining single. Journal or sit quietly to reflect on this issue.

Connect with family members: nieces, nephews, brothers, sisters, mothers, and fathers. Spend time with those who have known you for a long time that can help provide counsel to you.

Connect with friends. Plan a get together and give yourself a chance to share about past relationships that you are no longer in that were unhealthy.

Spend time with animals or in nature. Spending time with a familiar pet can help us to feel needed. Spending time in familiar places in nature helps us to feel embraced and less alone.

Engage in meditation or yoga practice. It will help to deal with the natural, human desire to be with someone and to develop the strength to examine it skill and care. Contemplative practice can also help you to experience the love of something divine.

Cook yourself a meal. Food is good medicine. Consider making a meal that leads you to feel a sense of comfort and nourishment.

Masturbate. Get in touch with how it feels to be touched, caressed, and sexually excited so that the next time you are with a partner, you can help show them how to turn you on.

Take a break from technology and advertising. Give yourself an opportunity to avoid the bombardment by consumer culture that plays on our anxiety and fears about being alone.

Practice self care. Get a massage, a haircut, or spend time at a spa.

Laugh at the hype. Go to a local drug store or supermarket and take delight in the fact that your affections are not being bargained for with teddy bears, helium balloons, cheap chocolate, and sappy cards.

There are lots of good reasons for being single, many of which cannot be celebrated in the most conventional means. Our culture continues to perpetuate the myth that being satisfied with our lives includes having fulfillment in a relationship. Doing what makes you happy is obviously the best way to offer your unique gifts to the world and to live a genuinely healthy existence, and sometimes this path doesn’t lead towards long term fulfillment in relationships. Don’t forget that the most complex and important relationship that we have is with ourselves and that we must remain true to ourselves in order to feel whole and complete about our lives.

About Joe Elliott

Joe Elliott has been working to help families for the past fifteen years. His specialties are in couples counseling, family therapy, death and dying, parenting, financial management, and adoption. Joe received his undergraduate degree from Naropa University in Psychology and Religious Studies and his Masters in Counseling from Regis University in Denver. Joe completed a Post-Graduate Certificate in Marriage and Family Therapy from The Denver Family Institute. Joe has also taught Family Therapy to students at Metro State University of Denver and Regis University. Find out more: http://joeelliottfamilytherapy.org/.

28407711 Responseshttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.elephantjournal.com%2F2012%2F02%2F10-things-to-do-for-yourself-on-valentines-day-joe-elliott%2F10+Things+to+do+for+Yourself+on+Valentine%E2%80%99s+Day.+%7E+Joe+Elliott2012-02-12+03%3A25%3A56elephant+journalhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.elephantjournal.com%2F%3Fp%3D284077 to “10 Things to do for Yourself on Valentine’s Day. ~ Joe Elliott”

[…] Heart on Valentine’s Day: Lessons of Love and Compassion Photo: soulbounce With Valentine’s Day around the corner, instead of buying flowers and making dinner reservations, I find myself feeling […]

What about sympathetic joy for others, and their happiness? That seems to me like a much healthier way to grow as a single person on V-Day than to laugh at and judge how other people choose to celebrate in order to mask any negative emotions you may be feeling. Some of your other suggestions are nice, though, in my opinion : )

All of those things except maybe masturbation would benefit not only a single person, but a relationship as well. Valentines day, despite popular belief does not. It benefits the economy and perhaps the ego.

I'll go for laughing at consumerism. Nice article! I know self love and love of God is what heals and satisfies, but I do wish for partnership….and some balloons dang-it. I will be treating myself to "Shahrazad" with a friend on Valentines day this year.